Jeff,
While I think derailing completely into a bibliography of the environmental impact of AI
is inappropriate for this list (and despite your generous acknowledgement that you may
have missed something, I’m sure you’re as capable as I am of reviewing the literature),
your skepticism is on-topic enough in context for me to say some things and then be done:
First, the historic issues around water provision and grid-derived power supply around
data centers in the midwestern US offer some context for more recent discussions about
(all contemporary) tech and energy. Second, pervasive discussion of nuclear energy as a
useful “new” energy source gives some indication of the amount of power that emerging
systems need. The articles I’ve read for work that review the environmental impact of
future computing have so far relied either on the argument that nuclear is clean energy
(and the 1980s might have something to say about that; it should at least be a public
discussion rather than a private one), or the assumption that the technology itself will
produce new efficiencies or solutions at some point faster than we otherwise would that
will make it all okay. For me this latter argument relies a bit to much on the optimism of
people who have directly contributed to many of the problems in the world today, and/or
the philosophies they espouse (and in fact my primary conclusion overall has been that
it’s shockingly hard to get good data on this question, and that in itself should prompt
closer examination on all our parts).
There are also social and cultural reasons to be cautious about AI, as it is being
developed quickly and without significant ethical oversight — but they really are beyond
the scope of this discussion except to say that I think the human environment is also
worthy of concern.
To Michael’s point earlier, some people may like to know (minuscule impact or not) that
you can use “-ai” in your Google searches to stop it from giving that AI-generated summary
at the top of search results. A bit like my Amazon boycott and my personal choice not to
have a car, it’s a futile gesture in the grand scheme but one that feels right to/for me,
as it’s a “feature” I didn’t ask for and don’t need, and which I see causing harm to/for
others.
Louise.
On 13 Jan 2025, at 22:20, Jeff Kaufman via Contra
Callers <contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Louise, Keith: when you say that querying LLMs like this is an "environmental
disaster" or "bad for the planet", what are you referring to? Most claims
I've seen along these lines don't hold up at all when you start looking into the
sourcing, but I might be missing something?
Jeff